Culture surrounding animal welfare has shifted throughout Asia,
as more people join forces to create change.

In Asia, the
most headline-grabbing animal-welfare issues are those tied to
thousands of years of tradition, which continue to inform many
countries' cultures surrounding the uses of animals and animal
products. But as an economically powerful urban middle class emerges
in both East and South Asia, cultural attitudes are beginning to
shift, partially because of an increased access to world travel and
Western influence. As a result, a heightened awareness of
animal-welfare issues, coupled with the increasing acceptance of
animals as companions, has led numerous citizens to rally against
previously unquestioned practices.

In fact, there's never been a more
critical time for Asian countries to explore issues of animal
welfare. Meat consumption is at an all-time high in countries such
as India and China, the latter of which now eats more than twice as
much meat as American consumers, amounting to approximately a
quarter of all meat produced worldwide. In light of the continent's
evolution toward a more animal-friendly atmosphere, here are five
countries that have been at the heart of recent animal-welfare
victories.

China

In April, more than 200 animal-welfare advocates, responding to a
viral call to action on social-media platform Weibo, congregated at
a tollbooth in an effort to block a truck from transporting 580 dogs
to a local slaughterhouse. Because eating dog meat remains an
accepted--and legal--practice in China, the activists pooled their
resources to buy the malnourished and neglected dogs from the
shipper before sending them to a local shelter for care. Recently,
similar attempts have skyrocketed: An estimated 2,000 dogs have been
rescued in the past year alone,
NPR reports, and in 2011, activists successfully shut down a
centuries-old dog-eating festival after rigorous campaigning.

Opposition to bear-bile farming dominated the headlines for weeks
in February after Chinese celebrities such as basketball star Yao
Ming spoke out against the practice of collecting bile from the gall
bladders of living bears using metal tubes. The cruel industry,
which places as many as 20,000 bears in captivity each year to
gather their bile for medicine, is the focus of
Cages of Shame, a film
that chronicles the rescue of 10 bears, set to debut in September.

Taiwan

The island of Taiwan, governed by the Republic of China, has made
an effort in recent years to curb animal cruelty. Late last year,
the country became the first in Asia to introduce legislation
banning shark finning--the act of cutting off sharks' fins and
throwing them back to the water to die. The law was a response to
local luxury hotels' refusal to stop serving shark fin soup, a
traditional meal favored by wealthy Chinese. Up to 73 million sharks
die each year to satisfy the public's appetite for the controversial
soup, which remains associated with opulence in spite of global
efforts to diminish its significance.In addition to shark
finning, the Taiwanese government recently proposed a ban on mercy
releases, a spiritual ritual during which Buddhists release captive
animals into the wild in order to improve their karma. According to
government officials, approximately 200 million animals, mostly
birds and fish, are released annually. Facing unnatural habitats and
a lack of food, few end up surviving. The government is currently in
negotiations to finalize the ban, with support from animal-welfare
and environmentalist organizations such as
Environment and Animal Society of
Taiwan and Humane Society
International.

Japan

Even in a country at the forefront of technological innovations,
animal-welfare standards in Japan continue to lag. Academy
Award-winning film The Cove educated millions about dolphin slaughter in Taiji,
Japan, a village known for producing whale and dolphin meat.
Following the success of the film, mounting concern over cetacean
meat's endurance in Japanese culture led hundreds of thousands of
angry consumers to petition against its sale on amazon.com's
Japanese subsidiary in early 2012. The public outcry was effective:
In March, soon after the media picked up the story, the online
retailer removed the items, many of which reportedly came from
endangered and protected species.

More recently, the Japanese
government passed an ordinance that bans the display of animals
after 8pm. The country's environment ministry created the law in
response to a whopping 155,000 requests from Japanese consumers--a
number French news agency
Agence France-Presse called 'unusually high -- in politically
ambivalent Japan.' The requests were mainly an effort to prohibit
Tokyo pet shops from placing dogs and cats on display in cramped
glass compartments well into the night. But to some animal-welfare
advocates, a beneficial byproduct of the law is that it may derail Japan's popular cat cafe industry, which enables customers to mingle
with cats in a potentially stressful coffee shop environment.

Indonesia

The Indonesian livestock-slaughter industry received a massive
blow in the summer of 2011 after nonprofit Animals Australia
captured undercover footage of Australian cows being brutally abused
at an Indonesian slaughterhouse. According to
ABC News, which broadcast the video, Indonesia is a central
market for the export of Australian livestock, with 60 percent of
the country's cattle ending up in the Southeast Asian country.
Uproar over the footage forced the Australian government to suspend
cattle exports to Indonesia and implement tougher welfare standards.

Though trade resumed a month later, Indonesia has had a
difficult time recovering from the financially damaging effects of
the ban. Still, according to animal-welfare advocates, there remains
a lot of work to be done. Last week, Animals Australia released yet
another video to the Agriculture Department depicting cruelty in
Indonesian slaughterhouses, proving that government regulations have
been weakly enforced.

India

The largely vegetarian nation of India is no stranger to issues
of animal welfare: In 1960, it became one of the first countries
worldwide to enact legislation prohibiting animal cruelty, and the
country's constitution lists compassion toward all beings as a
fundamental tenet. But some animal-welfare advocates are seeing a
discrepancy between the country's policies on paper and their
reality in practice, and are urging the immediate adoption of the
Animal Welfare Act of 2011. Proposed provisions of the measure
include prioritizing animal birth control and improving the
conditions for cattle being transported within the country.

Though the Animal Welfare Act of 2011 has yet to pass, its
predecessor, 1960's Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act, served as
the framework for groundbreaking new legislation banning the use of
animals in dissection and scientific research. Effective this year,
educational institutions, hospitals, and labs will be required to
use research alternatives such as computer simulations and
mannequins. The measure, which excludes new molecular research,
represents an effort to avoid the unnecessary suffering of animals.

As the animal-welfare movement continues to gain momentum in
Asia, activists' efforts will undoubtedly impact both the cultural
understanding and legislative policy surrounding the treatment of
animals. Perhaps, in time, welfare advocates will be able to
reconcile their desire to preserve tradition with their goal of
alleviating the suffering of all species